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Naviaux et. al.: Metabolic features of chronic fatigue syndrome

Sushi

Moderation Resource Albuquerque
Messages
19,935
Location
Albuquerque
I agree; hibernation sounds far too benevolent, comfortable almost.
We don't want this image heading news articles:
upload_2016-8-30_12-21-39.jpeg
 

JaimeS

Senior Member
Messages
3,408
Location
Silicon Valley, CA
Is this true for most patients though? I thought it was the reverse. I and some patients I know have elevated cholesterol levels. Was this tested?

Yup. Multiple times.

I wouldn't say it's true for everyone though -- definitely I've seen some patients who have high cholesterol as well. I'm only able to speak for myself.

Naviaux commented on the article and was very kind.

-J
 

Countrygirl

Senior Member
Messages
5,476
Location
UK
Is this true for most patients though? I thought it was the reverse. I and some patients I know have elevated cholesterol levels. Was this tested?

Mine is persistently very high and is unrelated to diet.

I have a diagnosis of hypertriglyceridemia. Very low BP has now become stage 3 hypertension with bouts of damaging bouts of malignant hypertension. I'd gladly exchange this for the previous hypotension that kept me horizontal for most of 30 years.............I do wonder if other long term ME patients experience this sudden switch. Not sure how this fits with the new paper.
 
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duncan

Senior Member
Messages
2,240
If these metabolic features prove to be diagnostic, I have very little problem with them being downstream effects - if that is indeed the case. That it begs the obvious causal question can be placed on the back burner for a short spell to celebrate.

I also have concerns the findings may not prove peculiar to ME, but they are offset by hopes that they will.

I want to know the cause, but for now I will be very happy with a solid and representative characterization of ME/CFS for the huge advance it appears to be - especially if the cause is secondary to the effect. Kudos, Team Stanford. The cheer for the day is Replicate, Replicate, Replicate.

After hoisting a well-earned beer. Or two.
 

Nielk

Senior Member
Messages
6,970
Yup. Multiple times.

I wouldn't say it's true for everyone though -- definitely I've seen some patients who have high cholesterol as well. I'm only able to speak for myself.

Naviaux commented on the article and was very kind.

-J
Naviaux told you that he tested the patients' cholesterol and they were all low?
 

viggster

Senior Member
Messages
464
The point I'm making is that activity is curtailed in PWME so some downregulation in metabolism might be expected as a consequence.
But the paper did not show "some" downregulation in metabolism. It showed massive, completely maladpative downregulation. Some of the metabolites are many standard deviations out of whack. I think it's smart to look at sedentary healthy people, but I'm guessing they will show nothing at all like what ME/CFS patients show.
 

bertiedog

Senior Member
Messages
1,740
Location
South East England, UK
Autoimmune diseases can be reversed/cured by diet alone - look at Dr Terry Wahls and the folk with MS who are following her and taking part in the trials she is funding. A whole pile of folk with Hashimotos are doing the same, including me. Vast improvements on the autoimmune Paleo protocol. Not popular news here.
I have been following this too having gone gluten and dairy free since May this year. It has had a very good effect on my ability to exercise in a gentle way and also my immune system has been working better. It hasn't done anything to help almost daily migraines nor helped my adrenal and POTS problem though.

Pam
 

Sasha

Fine, thank you
Messages
17,863
Location
UK
Naviaux commented on the article and was very kind.

Here's what he said:

Naviaux said:
You did a nice job explaining the implications of the sphingolipids for CFS biology. I had to cut 80% of our sphingolipids results and discussion to meet PNAS page limits. Some of this got relegated to the supplemental online material.

Kudos to you for a very nice job.

Well done, @JaimeS!
 

Nielk

Senior Member
Messages
6,970
Yup. Multiple times.

I wouldn't say it's true for everyone though -- definitely I've seen some patients who have high cholesterol as well. I'm only able to speak for myself.

Naviaux commented on the article and was very kind.

-J
This is a quote from the study:

Total plasma cholesterol, desmosterol, cortisol, and aldosterone were normal in both males and females with CFS.
 

Daisymay

Senior Member
Messages
754
Please could someone explain this apparent contradiction to me, I'm finding it hard to understand:

In the Open Medicine Foundation article it states:

http://tinyurl.com/z6sgbbh

"This result supports the controversial idea that while infection is often the initiating event for ME/CFS, it does not contribute to the ongoing illness."

However, the Naviux paper itself states (at the bottom of page 3):

“The low sphingolipid profile in CFS appears to be an adaptive response...and ultimately may represent a fundamental response to oppose the spread of persistent viral and intracellular bacterial infections”.

Not sure how to reconcile those two statements?